Venezuelan planes bring deported migrants home from US
The US and Venezuelan governments separately confirmed the flights by Venezuelan airline Conviasa without saying how many were aboard.
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Two Venezuelan planes returned from the United States on Monday carrying deported passengers.
The move signals a possible improvement in relations between long-time diplomatic adversaries and a victory for President Donald Trump in his efforts to get more countries to take their people back.
The US and Venezuelan governments separately confirmed the flights by Venezuelan airline Conviasa without saying how many were aboard or disclosing their routes.
“Flights of Illegal Aliens to Venezuela Resume,” the White House said in a post on the platform X, saying they were overseen by Richard Grennell, a top Trump adviser who recently travelled to Venezuela.
The Venezuelan government confirmed the flights in a statement that took issue with an “ill-intentioned” and “false” narrative around the presence of members of the Tren de Aragua gang in the United States.
It said most Venezuelan immigrants are decent, hard-working people and that US officials sought to stigmatise the South American country.
Deportation flights from the US to Venezuela were halted for years, but restarted for a short time under the Biden administration in October 2023 when a jet transported about 130 migrants home.
Venezuelans began showing up at the US border with Mexico in large numbers in 2021 and are one of the largest nationalities entering illegally.
Monday’s flights came days after the first flights of immigrants to a US military base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and after US Secretary of State Marco Rubio struck agreements with El Salvador and Guatemala to take people who were not their citizens.
![Venezuela US Deportation Flights](http://content.assets.pressassociation.io/AP/2025/02/10/de53eead976343c3a25fc430748eb235.jpg?w=640)
In their request for a temporary halt, lawyers for the men said their clients “fit the profile of those the administration has prioritised for detention in Guantanamo, i.e. Venezuelan men detained in the El Paso area with (false) charges of connections with the Tren de Aragua gang”.
Mr Trump wrote after Mr Grennell’s visit that government of President Nicolas Maduro had agreed to receive “all Venezuela illegal aliens who were encamped in the US, including gang members of Tren de Aragua,” and pay for their transportation.
Six Americans held in Venezuela were released at the time.
In its statement on Monday, the Venezuelan government did not comment on any future flights.